Organization of the sex-ratio meiotic drive region in Drosophila simulans

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Abstract

Sex-ratio meiotic drive is the preferential transmission of the X chromosome by XY males, which occurs in several Drosophila species and results in female-biased progeny. Although the trait has long been known to exist, its molecular basis remains completely unknown. Here we report a fine-mapping experiment designed to characterize the major drive locus on a sex-ratio X chromosome of Drosophila simulans originating from the Seychelles (X SR6). This primary locus was found to contain two interacting elements at least, both of which are required for drive expression. One of them was genetically tracked to a tandem duplication containing six annotated genes (Trf2, CG32712, CG12125, CG1440, CG12123, org-1), and the other to a candidate region located ∼110 kb away and spanning seven annotated genes. RT-PCR showed that all but two of these genes were expressed in the testis of both sex-ratio and standard males. In situ hybridization to polytene chromosomes revealed a complete association of the duplication with the sex-ratio trait in random samples of X chromosomes from Madagascar and Reunion. Copyright © 2006 by the Genetics Society of America.

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Montchamp-Moreau, C., Ogereau, D., Chaminade, N., Colard, A., & Aulard, S. (2006). Organization of the sex-ratio meiotic drive region in Drosophila simulans. Genetics, 174(3), 1365–1371. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.105.051755

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